I hesitate to throw my two cents in but what the heck.
There are alot of variables which will affect how fast a bow shoots an arrow of light and heavy weight.
If we reduce the variables by taking two nearly identical bows, same riser length, same limb length, same draw weight, same energy storage etc. The only difference being that one bow (A) has a shorter WORKING limb and bow (B) has a longer WORKING limb. Lets say that bow (A) has a shorter WORKING limb because the tips are stiff for the last 8".
1) The stiff tips of bow (A) can be made lighter than the working tips of bow (B). Therefore, total limb mass can be lower on bow (A).
2) A lighter limb can accelerate faster, and can therefore propel a light arrow faster than a heavier limb can.
3) If you made a graph of the arrow speed vs. arrow weight of bow (A) and bow (B), you would find that at low arrow weight bow (A) with its light weight tips would shoot faster than bow (B). As arrow weight increases you will see the difference in speed between the two bows decrease. Eventually, at very heavy arrow weights, the two bows will shoot nearly identical speeds.
4) There is no reason that a bow with less working limb would be less capable or less efficient shooting a heavy arrow than a bow having a greater working limb.
I hope this answers some of your question from the most fundamental basis.
There are so many other variables that will affect arrow speed, trying to compare two bows on the basis of working limb alone will not yield an accurate comparison of the differences in speed at various arrow weights.